AL AD BA 2 (en. & the new TTTTTTTTT ae Lt Litiititit COMMUNITY Bulletin Board CASTLEGAR WOMEN'S AGLOW Meeting will be held Wednesday. October 3rd. 10 30a.m Guest speaker will be Mrs. Luella David 2Ist 2.78 jowna. Babysitting provided at 704 PRIZE BINGO Appledale Hall, Soturday, September 29, 700 p.m. Ad mission REDUCED HAIR CUTS Sunday, September 30 at Harrlines. 621 Columbia Avenue. Walk-in 10:00 a.m. to 4.00 p.m. Proceeds tor Kootenay Society for the Handicapped 78 FALL RUMMAGE SALE Watch tor detoils, Auxiliary to the Castlegar and District Hospital. For items to be picked up, please call — Patsy 365-8302, Sharon 365-5552, Joon 365.5460, Murile 365 2737 atter 6 p.m 2/78 First Choice-Super Channel, they in- clude: Ghandi, Under Fire, Merry Christ- mas Mr. Lawrence, The World According to Garp, Not Neces- sarily the News, Cross Creek and Draw. 7:05—“Russian Language Lesson” — A Russian language _telecourse suitable for children, entitled “Runaway.” Determined to avoid his summer chores, Andrei runs away from home to his uncle's farm. 7:25—“ Art Kube and Unem -B.C. government. . Hosted Roberta ‘Taylor, 8:00—Chain Saw Safety Clinic es bush cutting equip- ment safety. 9:00— Hoe Hill Coffee House — Held at the Ross- land Miner's Union Hall Sept. 23, featur- ing the following lo cal talent: John Veer, Curt Garnson, Mi- chael Gifford, Michael Riley, Jim Murphy, John and Marion Cul- len, Ken Turner, and John Miller and Ruby. Novelist says he's no LONDON (REUTER) Graham Greene, one of the most widely read modern British novelists, does not think he ranks among the world’s greatest authors. He told the BBC in a radio interview to be broadcast Coming events of Castlegar ond District non-profit organizations may be listed here. The first 10 words are $3 ond additional words are 15€ each. Boldtaced words (which must be used tor headings) count as two words There is no extra charge tor a second consecutive inser tion while the third consecutive insertion is half-price Minimum charge is $3 (whether ad is for one, two or three times). Deadlines ore 5 p.m. Thursdays for Sunday's poper and 5 p.m. Mondays tor Wednesday's paper Notices should be brought to the Castlegar News of 197 Columbia Ave COMMUNIT Bulletin Board HENNE TOURS Reno Bus Tours from 275 OocT. Reno, 7 days, bare Hotel (non amoking) oct 6ut Reno, GOL Oe i Hotel OCT. 28 Reno, 7 days, Sands Hotel NOV.3 Reno, 7 Deys, Sundowner NOV. 17 Reno, 7 Days, Sundowner sk you can choose @ cost of $259 per person on 7 days, $269 on 8 days trom Nelson Castlegar or Trail to Reno and return aboard o luxury cooch SENIOR CITIZENS 2nd ANNUAL JAMBOREE Oct. 12 Lethbridge 3 Days, 2 Nights . . . $159.1 wen HOW ABOUT AN EVENING OUT! IN SPOKANE INTRODUCING CHARLIE PRIDE OCTOBER 21.. . $89.00 OAKRIDGE BOYS NOVEMBER 2. . . $89.00 16-Da ia Tour DEPARTS OCTOBER 14 Visits to Reno, tas Vegas San Diego, San Francisco $999 Dbi/T. Sharing RRRARAARRARARRAR Think Christmas Now! DISNEYLAND FLY /TOUR DECEMBER 21 — 10 doys of erijoyment Special discount for kids 2 to 11 years Wavallinig with edulis ALSO AVAILABLE: DISNEYLAND BUS TOUR December 22, 1984 All prices bosed on shored occommodetion this “I think I am one of the goods, but great is too strong a word. When one thinks of Balzac, Tolstoy and Dickens, I don’t think any contemporary novelist can claim to be of that stature. “I think I may have mat ched some good writers, Greene added. “The great ness of each man lies in their depth of characterization, t great their skill in narrative and their kind of universal ap peal.” Greene, who lives in the south of France will be 80 next month. He has written 23 novels and has been men- tioned several times as a possible Nobel Prize winner. Fame, he said, is “very inconvenient — that is one of the reasons I keep off tel evision.” He added that fam. iliarity caused a writer to lose his “protective coloring.” His latest book, Getting To Know The General, will be published this week and is about the former president of Panama, Omar Torrijos, who died in a plane crash in 1981 We are open at 4p.m. dail For more information phone 365-3294 D-BAR-D Licensed Dining Lounge 1 Ootischenio D-BAR-D 7 DINMel con eciels For the price of one! Special starts Friday, Sept. 28 LIGHT OPERA . . . Members of the Rossland Light Opera (from left) Jim Detong, Peter d’Aoust and George Bourchier sing the tale of The Begat trom Doesn’t like plane OMAHA, NEB. (AP) — Singer Wayne Newton says he was pleased with the in. terior decor of his new air. plane, but was unhappy it weighed too much to carry the 14 to 16 passengers he wanted to transport. Newton is suing Fairchild Aviation Corp. of San An tonio, Texas, and Duncan Aviation Ine. of Lincoln, Meb., which outfitted his twin-engine Fairchild Merlin 2. “The plane was grossly overweight,” the entertainer said in U.S. District Court. “I think he said that if we had a full load of fuel, we couldn't get anybody on it.” Fotheringham on television TORONTO (CP Colum nist Allan Fotheringham has been signed to replace the late Gordon Sinclair eg. ular panelist on CBC-TV's Front Page Challenge, which starts its 28th season Oct. 11 y Located one mile South of Weigh Scale} Happy Birthday Carol From you know who! But Fotheringham, 52, says Sinclair, who died last May, is irreplaceable “I'm not here to fill the shoes or the kilt of Gordon Sinclair. No one will ever be a Gordon Sinclair in this coun try.” Fotheringham, who joins regulars Fred Davis, Pierre Berton and Betty Kennedy, is Washington-based corres pondent for Southam News and writes a weekly column for Maclean's magazine. Meanwhile, producer Ray McConnell said 13 of the season's 26 shows will be taped outside Toronto in various | WERE ALL GEARED UP FOR THE 12:00 — 8:00 p.m SUNDAY —SEPTEMBER 30 TRUCKLOAD SALE Fri. & Sat. September 28 & 29 12:00 — 6:00 p.m 12:00 — 6:00 p.m. Finian’s Rainbow. This is part of Gems of the Stage coming to Castlegar Sept. 2 Light opera comes to town The Rossland Light Opera Players will feature Gems of the Stage Friday at 8 p.m. at Stanley Humphries Sec ondary School The revue will highlight solos, duets, dancing, mono- logues and many choral num bers as above, in a chorus from Show Boat RLOP has been in exis tence for 33 years. They per. form one major production annually — past shows in clude Mikado, Oklahoma, Guys & Dolls, Show Boat, Pirates of Penzance, My Fair Lady and many, many others. RLOP try to do a smaller production revue type — as often as possible, just be- cause they “enjoy so much performing together.” Their major production is The Music Man planned for ~Rebruary 1966. P welcomes any C: ple Friday's performance is sponsored by Castlegar Arts Council and tickets are avail able at the door New films in the lead HOLLYWOOD (AP) — All of Me and The Evil That Men Do, two early fall movie re leases, muscled into the lead at the United States box of. fice over the weekend as the summer favorite, Ghostbus topped $200 million in gross ticket sales All of Me, a comedy starring Steve Martin and Lily Tomlin about a man and a woman trying to get along in one body, brought in $5.8 million to debut at No. 1 The Evil That Men Do, a g ters, @ NEC COMPONENTS @ NEC MONITORS NEC STEREOS The Video Station MACHINES 15-victim Charles Bronson tale distributed by Tri-Star, opened with a gross of $4.5 million. The $2.9 million grossed by Ghostbusters was enough to boost its 16-week total to $200.9 million. Rock star Prince's first film, Purple Rain, dropped one notch into fourth with a gross of $2.1 million. Tight rope, No. 1 the previous week, took the biggest tum. ble, dropping all the way to fifth place at $2 million VIDEO The way things are going, it's hard to do anything, anyway. Denald Carroll Bill Bennett and his crew are useless. They don't try to make em: Kathy Dillen Delores to do anything. ployment. We need a change of gov ernment. What they can do is hire con- tractors in the area. Promote con tractors that are here. Cusiter It's really up to the government I think it's going to be up to the federal government to do some- thing. They better stop at ‘back. They 8 should call a election, Jack I think the federal government's got to help a great deal in getting jobs. Stamp exhibit starts Saturday The David Thompson Stamp Club will hold its 14th annual stamp exhibition at the Community Complex Saturday from 9 a.m. to 5 p-m. and Sunday from 10 a.m to 3:30 p.m. Stamp collectors from all over B.C., Spokane and Cas. tlegar will be displaying their special stamps. There will be stamp dealers selling stamps, albums, and other items. The mobile philatelie unit from Nelson will also be selling the latest issues and covers. On Sunday morning there will be an auction of every thing relating to stamp coll ecting starting at 11 a.m Admission to the exhibi tion is free but there will be a collection. Anyone stamp collecting can get all the information they need at the door or from any of the club members who are there interested in Lodge to convene Oct. | Ted Eagles of Kamloops Grand Chancellor of the Fraternal Order, Knights of Pythias of British Columbia, will make an official visit to Twin Rivers Lodge No. 70 of Castlegar, when the Lodge convenes in regular conven tion on Oet. 1 at 7:30 p.m. in the Masonic Hall. The Lodge Chancellor Commander will preside at the meeting at which ritual istic grand honors will be ex- tended to Eagles in recog nition of his official capacity in the 120-year old fraternal organization. The fraternal order, Knights of Pythias, has more than 2,000 subordinate lod ges throughout Canada and the United States, with 46 grand lodges organized from its more than 113,000 mem bership. The order bases its lessons and builds its ritual largely from the familiar story of the friendship of Damon and Py. thias, who were historical characters living about 500 years before the Chritian era. They were members of a school, founded by Pytha TED EAGLES Grand Chancellor goras, who was known as the father of Greek philosophy The distinguishing prin ciples of the Knights of Py thias are friendship, charity apd benevolence. Currently on official and social visits to the various lodges throughout the prov ince, Eagles will discuss grand lodge programs toge. ther with the efficiency in operations of the subordinate lodges in their various com munity endeavors. A 21-year member of the Knights of Pythias, Eagles has been actively involved over the years in various subordinate and grand lodge elected and appointed com mittee work Elected to grand lodge of fice in 1979, he has contin uously worked his way to the Grand Chancellor capacity Also a member of the Dramatic Order Knights of Khorrasan, an auxiliary of the Knights of Pythias, he is employed by CP Rail in Kamloops. qciik Creat Arrow Lakes Fisheries Bio- logist for the Fish and Wild- life Branch. Lindsay said the Hill Creek spawning channel was con structed in 1980/81 as part of a fisheries compensation package to replace 500,000 adult Kokanee lost in Upper Arrow Lake as a result of construction of the Revel stoke 1880 Dam. The channel requires 100,000 spawning adults to create an adult return — catch plus escapement — of 500,000 based on a 40 per cent egg to fry survival rate and a subsequent 10 per cent fry to adult return So far this year, just over 65,000 kokanee have re turned to spawn Lindsay said that the re turn this year is from a plant of 110,000 fed kokanee fry which were released into the channel in May four years ago. The adult return from this plant is around 40 per cent is better than expected Lindsay said “It's great to see all these kokanee in the channel, most of the gravel sections of the channel are solid red with kokanee,” he said. Lindsay also said that the average size of this year’s run is about 10 per cent lar- ger than previous year’s and the feeundity (number of egg per female) is also up by about 15 per cent. Lindsay said that the rea- son the fish are larger could be a result of fewer kokanee in the lake. Lost production from 500,000 due to the Rev- elstoke Dam, have not yet been replaced by the Hill Creek spawning channel. As well, with the same amount of food available to them, the fish are growing a little larger. Expected kokanee returns for the next two years are around 100,000 adults. Lind- say said the branch will be monitoring the size and fec- undity to see if it holds up over ht enext few years. Lindsay went on to say that the fish will be actively spawning in the channel until early October and can be viewed by the public. Naturalists witness rare sightings The past summer was an eventful one for the West Kootenay Naturalists Club, which reports some well attended outings. Hikers and birdwatchers seemed to had a more pro- ductive season than those interested in flowers, who this year did not come up with any new sightings worth reporting to the Pro- vincial Museum or other authorities. During the past couple of years, flower enthusiasts have had the-thrill of finding and confirming several plants previously not reported in this part of the province. One highlight for the bird. watchers was spotting an In digo Bunting in the Creston area. This was only the fourth such sighting in B.C There were signs that there was a mate and nest in the area — something which would be a first One rare sight in the Trail area was a Long-tailed Jae ger resting along the Colum bia River. The Long-tailed Jaeger is a very distinctive Costlegor Arts Council Presents THE ROSSLAND LIGHT OPERA PLAYERS IN Gems from the Stage a variety show including selections from Showboat, Finian’s Rainbow, Oklahoma, South Pacific, the Mikado and many more. FRI., SEPT. AT STANLEY HUMPHRIES SCHOOL TICKETS AT THE DOOR. Adults $4. Under 12. $1. Refreshments at Intermission | 28 -8 p.m. Jefferson Jtouse MOTOR /NAJ TO THE CELEBRATING OUR l0th YEAR OF SERVICE INLAND EMPIRE + GUEST LAUNDROMAT bird of the open ocean and is rarely seen on land on its migration to the Arctic. On a local note, a bluebird has long been considered a symbol of happiness, but to have as many as 27 gather at your house for breakfast must overflow the cup a bit. A house in Castlegar has an electric insect-zapper and the birds seem to relish the toasted Caddis-flies, familiar ly called river months. While many members of the naturalists elub climbed around spots tke Mt. Rob- son, Mt. Assiniboine and Waterton Lakes, others visi ted close-to-home spots like Record Ridge, Old Glory and Kokanee Glacier Park. In other news, the club apologized for a statement made in its last report that Loyd Groutage was elected the club's first Castlegar president In fact Bill Merilees, then an instructor at Selkirk Col. lege and a prime mover in the organization of the club, was elected the club's first pres ident and was followed in that position by Frank Wil cox, also of Castlegar. S SIX DAYS A WEEK. Proper Dress Fri. & Sat. after 9 p.m. Guests Must Playing Fri. & Sat. Be SIGNED In BLUE RIVER Thursday & Sunday Bingo. Early Bird 6:15 Time makes your kids into adults and takes them away to lives of their own. You can't stop time. But you can freeze memories, with beautiful photographic portraits. Many mothers have them made every year so they can remember their children just as they were at a given point in their lives. And the price of those portraits is so reasonable, almost every mother can afford to have them done $14.95 95¢ "otal Package’ Deposit 2 (8x10’s) 3 (5x7’s) 15 wallets PHOTOGRAPHY DAYS & HOURS Friday & Saturday, Sept. 28 & 29 FRIDAY — 10-1,2-7:30 SATURDAY — 10-1,2-5 es ape the poses,.A 95¢ deposit required for each kage pluadl OO sitting fee for each acicidonal whose pe Additional portraits can be purchased NEW! EXCLUSIVE! COMPOSITE PORTRAIT YOURS FOR ONLY $25.00 A stunning variety of poses in one portrait makes the Composite a priceless memory of your chitd KAL: / TIRE our Best Buy! 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